How to list the functions of a namespace?

后端 未结 4 1848
悲哀的现实
悲哀的现实 2020-11-29 18:17

I would like to know how to list all functions of a Clojure namespace. I\'ve done some research but I\'m not there yet. I already found out how to list the methods of a Java

相关标签:
4条回答
  • 2020-11-29 18:59

    I normally call

    (keys (ns-publics 'foo))
    

    to list Vars exported by the namespace foo; e.g. for clojure.contrib.monads this returns

    (defmonad censor m-when-not m+write+m maybe-m maybe-t ...)
    

    (the ... stands for quite a lot more).

    More generally, there's a bunch of functions whose names start in ns- which list Vars by namespace, with certain additional criteria attached:

    1. ns-map -- the most general function of all, returns a map keyed by symbols (non-namespace-qualified symbols actually), where the value corresponding to each symbol is the Var or class that symbol resolves to in the given namespace.

    2. ns-interns -- like ns-map, but includes only the Vars interned in the given namespace (as opposed to Vars from other namespaces which are accessible from the given namespace due to a use or refer call or the implicit referral of Vars from clojure.core.

    3. ns-publics -- like ns-interns, but includes only the non-private Vars.

    4. ns-imports -- like ns-map, but includes only the entries whose values correspond to Java classes.

    There's also ns-aliases which lists symbols which can be used as shorthand aliases when referring to Vars from other namespaces; e.g. if you call (require '[clojure.contrib.math :as math]), ns-aliases will include an entry with the key of math (the symbol), whose value will be the actual namespace clojure.contrib.math. These mapping are not included in the map returned by ns-map.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-29 19:02

    Have a look here. More specifically:

    ;; Sometimes I like to ask which public functions a namespace provides.
    (defn- ns-publics-list [ns] (#(list (ns-name %) (map first (ns-publics %))) ns))
    
    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-29 19:06

    For those who use of Counterclockwise, there is a "Namespace Browser" that is shown by default.

    If not visible, it can be shown via menu option:

    Window > Show View > Namespace Browser

    Official documentation: http://doc.ccw-ide.org/documentation.html#_namespace_browser_view

    Excerpt from official documentation:

    The Namespace Browser View displays all symbols of all namespaces of the active REPL.[2]. It allows you to jump to the definition of symbols in the relevant files (including inside jars): just double-click on the symbol name in the Namespace Browser View.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-29 19:15

    You can use dir. (Perhaps this wasn't available when the question was first asked.)

    user=> (dir clojure.string)
    blank?
    capitalize
    escape
    join
    lower-case
    re-quote-replacement
    replace
    replace-first
    reverse
    split
    split-lines
    trim
    trim-newline
    triml
    trimr
    upper-case
    nil
    
    0 讨论(0)
提交回复
热议问题